MORE OF THE RESULTS OF WAR
I need not trouble the reader with
an account of the meeting with my faithful servant.
While we were still engaged in questioning each other,
I noticed that the countenance of our friend the scout
wore an anxious and almost impatient expression.
“Anything wrong, Dobri?” I inquired.
“God knows!” he replied
in a solemn tone, which impressed me much. “A
rumour has come that the Circassians or the Bashi-Bazouks I
know not which, but both are fiends and cowards have
been to Venilik, and ”
He stopped abruptly.
“But that village was in the
hands of the Russians,” I said, at once understanding
his anxiety.
“It may be so, but I go to see
without delay,” he replied, “and have
only stopped thus long to know if you will go with
me. These brutes kill and wound women and children
as well as men. Perhaps your services may Will
you go?”
He spoke so earnestly, and his face
looked so deadly pale, that I felt it impossible to
refuse him. I was much exhausted by the prolonged
labours of the day, but knew that I had reserve strength
for an emergency.
“Give me a few minutes,”
said I, “just to get leave, you know.
I can’t go without leave.”
The scout nodded. In ten minutes
I had returned. Meanwhile, Lancey had prepared
my horse and his own. Swallowing a can of water,
I vaulted into the saddle. It was very dark,
but Petroff knew every foot of the country.
For several hours we rode at a smart gallop, and then,
as day was breaking, drew near to Venilik. As
we approached, I observed that the bold countenance
of the scout became almost pinched-looking from anxiety.
Presently we observed smoke against the sky, and then
saw that the village had undoubtedly been burned.
I glanced at Petroff nervously. There was no
longer a look of anxiety on his face, but a dark vindictive
frown.
He increased his pace to racing speed.
As we followed close at his heels, I observed that
he drew a knife from his belt, and with that as a
spur urged on his jaded steed. At last we reached
the outskirts of the village, and dashed through.
Blackened beams, ruined houses, dead men and women,
met our horrified gaze on every side.
At the well-known turn of the road,
where the bypath joined it, Dobri vaulted from his
horse, and let the animal go, while he ran towards
his dwelling. We also dismounted and followed
him. Then a great and terrible shout reached
our ears. When we came to the cottage we found
the scout standing motionless before his old home,
with his hands clasped tightly, and his eyes riveted
to the spot with a glare of horror that words cannot
describe.
Before him all that had been his home
was a heap of blackened ashes, but in the midst of
these ashes were seen protruding and charred bones.
It did not require more than one glance to show that
recognition of the remains was impossible. Everything
was reduced to cinders.
As we gazed an appalling cry rang
in our ears, and next moment a young woman darted
out from behind a piece of the blackened walls with
a knife in her hand.
“Hah! are you come back, you
devils?” she shrieked, and flew at Dobri, who
would certainly have been stabbed, for he paid no attention
to her, if I had not caught her wrist, and forced
the knife from her grasp. Even then she sprang
at him and fastened her fingers in his neck while
she cried, “Give me back my child, I say! give
me my child, you fiend!”
She stopped and looked earnestly in
his face, then, springing back, and standing before
him with clenched hands, she screamed
“Ha, haa! it is you, Dobri!
why did you not come to help us? traitor
coward to leave us at such a time!
Did you not hear the shrieks of Marika when they
dragged her from your cottage? Did you not see
the form of little Dobri quivering on the point of
the Circassian’s spear? Were you deaf when
Ivanka’s death-shriek pierced my ears like .
Oh! God forgive me, Dobri, I did not mean to ”
She stopped in the torrent of her
wrath, stretched both arms convulsively towards heaven,
and, with a piercing cry for “Mercy!” fell
dead at our feet.
Still the scout did not move.
He stood in the same half-shrinking attitude of intense
agony, glaring at the ruin around him.
“Dobri,” said I at last,
gently touching his arm, and endeavouring to arouse
him.
He started like one waking out of
a dream, hurled me aside with such violence that I
fell heavily to the ground, and rushed from the spot
at full speed.
Lancey ran after him, but soon stopped.
He might as well have chased a mountain hare.
We both, however, followed the track he had pursued,
and, catching our horses, passed into the village.
“It’s of no use to follow,
sir,” said Lancey, “we can’t tell
which way ’e’s gone.”
I felt that pursuit would indeed be
useless, and pulled up with the intention of searching
among the ruins of the village for some one who might
have escaped the carnage, and could give me information.
The sights that met our eyes everywhere
were indeed terrible. But I pass over the sickening
details with the simple remark, that no ordinary imagination
could conceive the deeds of torture and brutality of
which these Turkish irregulars had been guilty.
We searched carefully, but for a long time could
find no one.
Cattle were straying ownerless about
the place, while dogs and pigs were devouring the
murdered inhabitants. Thinking it probable that
some of the people might have taken refuge in the
church, we went to it. Passing from the broad
glare of day into the darkened porch, I stumbled over
an object on the ground. It was the corpse of
a young woman with the head nearly hacked off, the
clothes torn, and the body half burnt. But this
was as nothing to the scene inside. About two
hundred villagers chiefly women, children,
aged, and sick had sought refuge there,
and been slaughtered indiscriminately. We found
the dead and dying piled together in suffocating heaps.
Little children were crawling about looking for their
mothers, wounded mothers were struggling to move the
ghastly heaps to find their little ones. Many
of these latter were scarce recognisable, owing to
the fearful sword-cuts on their heads and faces.
I observed in one corner an old man whose thin white
hair was draggled with blood. He was struggling
in the vain endeavour to release himself from a heap
of dead bodies that had either fallen or been thrown
upon him.
We hastened to his assistance.
After freeing him, I gave him a little brandy from
my flask. He seemed very grateful, and, on recovering
a little, told us, with many a sigh and pause for
breath, that the village had been sacked by Turkish
irregular troops, Circassians, who, after carrying
off a large number of young girls, returned to the
village, and slaughtered all who had not already fled
to the woods for refuge.
While the old man was telling the
mournful tale I observed a little girl run out from
behind a seat where she had probably been secreting
herself, and gaze wildly at me. Blood-stained,
dishevelled, haggard though she was, I instantly recognised
the pretty little face.
“Ivanka!” I exclaimed, holding out my
arms.
With a scream of delight she rushed
forward and sprang into them. Oh how the dear
child grasped me, twined her thin little
arms round me, and strained as if she would crush
herself into my bosom, while she buried her face in
my neck and gave way to restful moans accompanied by
an occasional convulsive sob!
Well did I understand the feelings
of her poor heart. For hours past she had been
shocked by the incomprehensible deeds of blood and
violence around her; had seen, as she afterwards told
me, her brother murdered, and her mother chased into
the woods and shot by a soldier; had sought refuge
in the church with those who were too much taken up
with their own terrible griefs to care for her, and,
after hours of prolonged agony and terror, coupled
with hunger and thirst, had at last found refuge in
a kindly welcome embrace.
After a time I tried to disengage
her arms, but found this to be impossible without
a degree of violence which I could not exert.
Overcome by the strain, and probably by long want of
rest, the poor child soon fell into a profound slumber.
While I meditated in some perplexity
as to how I should act, my attention was aroused by
the sudden entrance of a number of men. Their
dress and badges at once told me that they formed a
section of that noble band of men and women, who,
following close on the heels of the “dogs of
war,” do all that is possible to alleviate the
sufferings of hapless victims. God’s
work going on side by side with that of the devil!
In a few minutes surgeons were tenderly binding up
wounds, and ambulance-men were bearing them out of
the church from which the dead were also removed for
burial.
“Come, Lancey,” said I,
“our services here are happily no longer required.
Let us go.”
“Where to, sir?” said Lancey.
“To the nearest spot,”
I replied after a moment’s thought, “where
I can lie down and sleep. I am dead beat, Lancey,
for want of rest, and really feel unable for anything.
If only I can snatch an hour or two, that will suffice.
Meanwhile, you will go to the nearest station and
find out if the railway has been destroyed.”
We hurried out of the dreadful slaughter-house,
Ivanka still sound asleep on my shoulder, and soon
discovered an outhouse in which was a little straw.
Rolling some of this into a bundle for a pillow, I
lay down so as not to disturb the sleeping child.
Another moment and I too was steeped in that profound
slumber which results from thorough physical and mental
exhaustion.
Lancey went out, shut the door, fastened it, and left
us.